Jaundice that appears before the seventh day and before the maturation of the matter is a bad sign, unless relief does not correct the matter, as some doctors say, this is a speculative conclusion, and in general a crisis before the seventh day is not a commendable crisis. When jaundice appears after the seventh day, it is also not very safe unless it is accompanied by other symptoms, and if jaundice appears on the seventh, ninth or fourteenth day along with other commendable symptoms and in the absence of damage, hardening or swelling in the region of the liver, then it's beneficial. Often, therefore, a complete crisis occurs, and its praiseworthiness is indicated by the feeling of relief that appears after this, while the opposite sensation indicates malignancy.
One of the signs of a malignant crisis is the presence of jaundice in stool with a large amount of rapidly boiling bile and the release of bad burnt substances. In this case, you can fear for the patient if the matter is not corrected by an effective, cleansing relaxation or profuse perspiration and the strength does not turn out to be significant. Then relief comes quickly.